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UN MIssion Urges Congo To Confine Arrested People


UN Mission Calls On Dr Of Congo To Confine People Said To Have Been Arrested

The United Nations peacekeeping mission in the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC) has called on that country's Government to confine the militia leaders that had been arrested in the eastern region, saying the detainees had been put under house arrest and appeared able to move about and communicate freely, the UN spokesman said today.

After the deaths of nine UN peacekeepers and some 50 militia members over the past week, the situation in Ituri district was relatively calm, Fred Eckhard quoted the UN Organization Mission in the DRC (MONUC) as saying.

MONUC expressed concern, however, that although the National Transitional Government said it had arrested several of the people named in the Security Council's presidential statement on Wednesday, "these persons have been put under house arrest. Some even appear to move about freely and to retain means of communication," the spokesman said.

In a statement read at a formal meeting by this month's Council President, Brazilian Ambassador Ronaldo Mota Sardenberg, the 15-member body identified the perpetrators of last Friday's ambush and murders of the UN peacekeepers as members of the Nationalist Integrationist Front (FNI).

The Council blamed such leaders as FNI president Floribert Ndjabu and former FNI force commander Goda Supka, who were said to have been arrested along with Germain Katanga of the Forces of Patriotic Resistance in Ituri (FRPI).

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"The Mission is calling on the Government to truly arrest these people and bring them to justice, Mr. Eckhard said.

Meanwhile, the UN Children's Fund (UNICEF) said the renewed fighting and the killing of the UN peacekeepers had caused the withdrawal of UN staff members from much of the eastern DRC, cutting vital humanitarian aid to an estimated 54,000 displaced civilians, more than two-thirds of whom were women and children.

"These people sought sanctuary with the UN from the fighting. First forced to flee their homes, we've now been forced to abandon them because we can't be sure that our own staff won't be killed," UNICEF Executive Director Carol Bellamy said from London.

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